Abstract

An unresolved issue in the physics of lightning is an explanation for lightning proceeding to the ground by successive luminous steps separated by ‘dark’ times of many microseconds. There is also no explanation of the structure of the dark column connecting the streamer step with the cloud that can be km in length, is electrically conducting, yet has a very low sustaining electric field. It is proposed that these two processes can be explained by the accumulation of singlet delta metastable oxygen molecules excited in the corona pulses of lightning. The step time is necessary for the excitation of large metastable densities to produce significant metastable detachment of electrons from negative ions. The detached electrons form a highly conducting step, initially luminous, that causes a redistribution of electric fields and an increase in the potential and electric fields at the end of the step to make possible a further step by ionization. These features are supported by calculations of densities of electrons, positive ions, negative ions and singlet delta metastable oxygen molecules for the first 7 μs of a discharge chosen to be initiated by a 50 cm sphere of charged hail particles. The calculated corona streamers produce metastable densities of 1017 cm−3 near the corona source. These metastables, by electron detachment, produce a conducting cylinder 10 m long with a radius of 1 cm and an electron density ∼1012 cm−3 that is attributed to being the first step and a lightning ‘leader’. These conducting regions develop within them very low electric fields. Successive steps are likely to combine to form the long conductive columns of lightning that exist before the return stroke. Electron densities in the leader and the column are an equilibrium between electron production by metastable detachment and electron loss by attachment to neutral oxygen molecules, requiring no electric field.

Full Text
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